On the night of February 19, 1936, Francis Flood, an eighteen-year-old moron, ran away, or, as it is technically termed, "eloped" from the Wassaic State School in Amenia, *Page 43 New York, a public institution for the care and treatment of mental defectives, where he had been for about four months. Coming to a lumberyard in nearby Dover Plains, he entered an unlocked barn owned by Anthony Wathley, one of the claimants in this case. Since it was sub-zero weather and he was thinly clad, he kindled a fire in a bucket, using matches and cellophane which he had taken with him and pieces of straw which he found lying loose atop some bales of hay. When he felt sufficiently warmed, he resumed his flight — first turning the bucket upside down in the belief that that was the way to put out the flame. Unfortunately, however, the fire blazed and spread, causing the property damage for which Wathley and his coclaimants — two insurance companies which became subrogated to his rights to the extent of payments made to him under policies insuring the property against loss by fire — commenced this action upon consolidated claims for recovery against the State on the ground of negligence.
Flood had previously escaped many times from the Rome State School — where he had spent about nine years prior to entering Wassaic in October, 1935 — and once or, perhaps, twice before from Wassaic. Eighteen years of age, he was a high grade moron with an I.Q. of 66, only slightly below the dividing line, and a mental age of a boy of ten and one half years. While his judgment was deficient and while he demonstrated a definite inability to learn or to progress at school, he possessed no other important mental defect or disturbance. Neither his extensive case history nor the evidence in the case revealed that he had any criminal tendencies or that he had ever before caused injury to either person or property. Nothing in either his history or his record furnished the slightest basis for a belief that it was dangerous for him to have matches or that he might start a fire.
The Court of Claims dismissed the claims after trial, holding that the State could not reasonably have anticipated the fire damage on the basis of Flood's prior record; that his elopement was neither the result of negligence nor, at any rate, the proximate or responsible cause of the fire; and that his supervision and treatment by the Wassaic authorities were proper and reasonable under the circumstances. The Appellate Division reversed and found that the State was guilty of actionable negligence. *Page 44
The Court of Claims correctly decided in favor of the State Since dismissal of the claims is required as a matter of law, there is no need to consider the question of the weight of the evidence.
Wassaic State School was maintained, in accordance with constitutional mandate (N.Y. Const., art. XVII, § 4), for the care and treatment of the poor and indigent mental defectives of the State (Mental Hygiene Law, § 120). "Mental defective" is defined as "any person afflicted with mental defectiveness from birth or from an early age to such an extent that he is incapable of managing himself and his affairs, who for his own welfare or the welfare of others or of the community requires supervision, control or care and who is not insane or of unsound mind to such an extent as to require his commitment to an institution for the insane * * *" (§ 2, subd. 3, at present, subd. 9). Persons "in confinement on a criminal charge" may not be admitted to the school (§ 121).
In short, mental defectives are not received at Wassaic for the purpose of incarceration; they are there, to quote the language of the statute, for "care and treatment". The school, consistent with statutory policy and purpose, functions for the benefit and training of its charges, there being in prospect the restoration of the individual to a useful place in society. It was, in every sense, an open institution, one without walls or bars.
Toward the inmate Flood, the State had a "quasi-parental power" — bound, Sir Frederick Pollock has observed, to use more diligence in informing itself what treatment was proper for him than a parent would be bound to use. (Pollock on Law of Torts [new American ed., 1894], pp. 150-151.) So far as third persons were concerned, though, the State stood in loco parentis. (Cf. Restatement, Torts, §§ 316-317.) The State owed the community, the outside world, no greater duty than would parents under similar circumstances. In the absence of reason indicating a need to isolate him, neither parent nor State is under the necessity of locking him up or keeping him under constant surveillance. (Calabria v. State of New York, 289 N.Y. 613.)
No hazard being apparent, Flood's act cannot render the State responsible for the resulting damage. As Chief Judge CARDOZO phrased it in Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R. Co. *Page 45 (248 N.Y. 339, 344): "The risk reasonably to be perceived defines the duty to be obeyed," and that test has, in principle, been consistently applied by the courts in determining whether to impose liability upon the State where injury befalls the patient who elopes from a public institution (cf. Calabria v. State,supra; Martindale v. State of New York, 269 N.Y. 554;Shattuck v. State of New York, 166 Misc. 271, affd. 254 App. Div. 926) or a third person who is assaulted by an escaped inmate of a mental hospital (Weihs v. State of New York, 267 App. Div. 233; Jones v. State of New York, 267 App. Div. 254), or where property is damaged by such an inmate. (Benson v.State, 52 N.Y.S.2d 239.)
Regulations of the State Mental Hygiene Department, it is true, required the Wassaic authorities "to lock up all * * * matches" to search the clothing of patients for prohibited articles at regular intervals, and to keep elopers "under close and constant observation." From that standpoint, the State may have been negligent in not assuring compliance with the regulations and in not making certain that the boy did not elope. But such conduct, while perhaps a wrong in relation to its ward and to the institution itself, could not be regarded as a wrong to the community or to third persons, such as claimants herein. Even if the State acted negligently with respect to Flood or the institution, that fact does not entitle claimants herein to sue "as the vicarious" beneficiaries of the breach of duty owed to others. (Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R. Co., supra, p. 342.)
With the foregoing principles in mind, we fail to find basis for the imposition of liability upon the State. The authorities at Wassaic could not reasonably have anticipated — from his history of harmless elopements — a Flood likely to set fires, or otherwise dangerous, while at large. That being so, and since the boy was neither insane nor criminal, it owed no duty to claimants or other members of the outside world to guard him closely or to see to it that he did not leave the institution.
A situation somewhat analogous to that here involved was presented in Prudential Society, Inc., v. Ray (207 App. Div. 496, affd. 239 N.Y. 600). There, an incompetent had pledged with plaintiff pawnbroker a valuable diamond ring which her husband, who was also committee of her person and property, had given her. As the husband — defendant in the action predicated upon his asserted negligence — knew, she had long been in *Page 46 the habit of pawning jewelry and giving away clothing; in fact, the husband had previously replevied articles pledged by her. However, for sometime prior to the act of pledging referred to, she had apparently been normal and, indeed, her physicians had advised the husband to treat her as a normal person and not to keep her under restraint. In a suit for damages, after defendant had replevied the ring, it was held that the husband was not guilty of any breach of duty owed to the pawnbroker, since the wife's condition at the time was not such as to require confinement. (See, also, Ballinger v. Rader, 153 N.C. 488,151 N.C. 383; Hullinger v. Worrell, 83 Ill. 220.)
Decision herein has a significance which transcends the issue of whether or not a money recovery should be allowed. In time gone by, mental defectives were confined and kept under constant surveillance. Medical and psychiatric advances, demonstrating the inadvisability of that system, prompted the State to abandon it and adopt the modern and therapeutically approved method of allowing the moron a freedom of action without close and continual watching. To hold the State liable in a case such as the present may have an inimical and retarding effect on the treatment of mental defectives. The State, faced with accepting responsibility as an insurer of any damage the moron might cause, may well be tempted to depart from its salutary procedure, may well be influenced to revert to the outmoded and disadvantageous system of confining the mental defective, of keeping him under constant surveillance, while he is being trained to make those social adjustments essential to independent and successful living.
A balance must be struck between contending interests — (1) the State's duty to treat and care for its mental defective wards, with an eye toward returning them to society more useful citizens, and (2) the State's concern that the inmates of its institutions cause no injury or damage to the property of those in the vicinity. That balance may be hard to achieve. We keep within settled legal principles, however, if the State is held only to a duty of taking precautions against those risks "reasonably to be perceived" (Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R.Co., supra, p. 344), and if the community assumes the risk of accidental loss or damage to property by an inmate of an open institution such as Wassaic. *Page 47
In each action, the judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Court of Claims affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.